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Multi-centre evaluation of variation in cumulative dose assessment in reirradiation scenarios.

Authors :
Hardcastle, Nicholas
Vasquez Osorio, Eliana
Jackson, Andrew
Mayo, Charles
Aarberg, Anja Einebærholm
Ayadi, Myriam
Belosi, Francesca
Ceylan, Cemile
Davey, Angela
Dupuis, Pauline
Handley, Julia-Claire
Hemminger, Theresa
Hoffmann, Lone
Kelly, Colin
Michailidou, Chrysanthi
Muscat, Sarah
Murrell, Donna H.
Pérez-Alija, Jaime
Palmer, Catherine
Placidi, Lorenzo
Source :
Radiotherapy & Oncology. May2024, Vol. 194, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

[Display omitted] • We assessed interobserver variation in reirradiation dose assessment. • Significant variation in near maximum doses to critical organs was observed. • Variation was reduced with spatial mapping of dose using image registration. Safe reirradiation relies on assessment of cumulative doses to organs at risk (OARs) across multiple treatments. Different clinical pathways can result in inconsistent estimates. Here, we quantified the consistency of cumulative dose to OARs across multi-centre clinical pathways. We provided DICOM planning CT, structures and doses for two reirradiation cases: head & neck (HN) and lung. Participants followed their standard pathway to assess the cumulative physical and EQD2 doses (with provided α/β values), and submitted DVH metrics and a description of their pathways. Participants could also submit physical dose distributions from Course 1 mapped onto the CT of Course 2 using their best available tools. To assess isolated impact of image registrations, a single observer accumulated each submitted spatially mapped physical dose for every participating centre. Cumulative dose assessment was performed by 24 participants. Pathways included rigid (n = 15), or deformable (n = 5) image registration-based 3D dose summation, visual inspection of isodose line contours (n = 1), or summation of dose metrics extracted from each course (n = 3). Largest variations were observed in near-maximum cumulative doses (25.4 – 41.8 Gy for HN, 2.4 – 33.8 Gy for lung OARs), with lower variations in volume/dose metrics to large organs. A standardised process involving spatial mapping of the first course dose to the second course CT followed by summation improved consistency for most near-maximum dose metrics in both cases. Large variations highlight the uncertainty in reporting cumulative doses in reirradiation scenarios, with implications for outcome analysis and understanding of published doses. Using a standardised workflow potentially including spatially mapped doses improves consistency in determination of accumulated dose in reirradiation scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01678140
Volume :
194
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Radiotherapy & Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176760897
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2024.110184